This Thursday, August 11, Kandi Mosset, an organizer with the Indigenous Environmental Network and enrolled member of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nations on the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota spoke on KPFK’s Sojourner Truth Hour about the unfolding tragedy of oil and gas fracking in North Dakota and across Indian Country. Listen to the archived show by clicking here and scrolling to minute 6:48.
Category Archives: Energy
Kandi Mosset, of Fort Berthold Reservation, North Dakota, talks about fracking in Indian Country on 90.7, KPFK
Comments Off on Kandi Mosset, of Fort Berthold Reservation, North Dakota, talks about fracking in Indian Country on 90.7, KPFK
Filed under Energy, Indigenous Peoples
Earth Minute Remembers Nuclear Disasters in Japan
This week’s Earth Minute, a collaboration between Global Justice Ecology Project and the Sojourner Truth show on KPFK Los Angeles Pacifica radio, commemorates the 66th anniversary of the bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima and ties them to the current nuclear crisis going on at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan.
To listen, go to: http://archive.kpfk.org/parchive/mp3/kpfk_110809_070010sojourner.MP3 and scroll to minute 33:40.
Also on the program is nuclear power expert Arne Gunderson about the ongoing nuclear crisis in Japan at minute 19:30.
This week’s Earth Minute transcript:
On this day, sixty-six years ago, the Japanese city of Nagasaki was devastated by an atomic bomb, dropped by the United States. Three days earlier, Hiroshima was similarly bombed. Today these cities lead the nuclear disarmament movement.
And since the ongoing disaster at Fukushima, the mayors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are also calling for a ban on nuclear energy.
To the Japan-based World Peace Appeal group, the Fukushima meltdown is the fourth nuclear disaster suffered by the Japanese people, after Hiroshima, Nagasaki and the atomic tests on the Bikini Islands. They explain:
“The human tragedy of the past disasters that included fatalities, cancer and other radiation induced diseases, illustrates the hidden and lingering problems of nuclear power. We must sustain the awareness raised by Fukushima and speak out about the dangers we face if we continue to pursue nuclear energy.”
“We must never again repeat the mistake of forgetting.”
For the Earth Minute and the Sojourner Truth show, this is Anne Petermann from Global Justice Ecology Project.
Comments Off on Earth Minute Remembers Nuclear Disasters in Japan
Filed under Earth Minute, Energy, Nuclear power, Posts from Anne Petermann
KPFK Radio Earth Segment This Week on the EPA’s Ruling on Biomass Burning
Global Justice Ecology Project partners with the Sojourner Truth show on KPFK Pacifica Los Angeles each week for an Earth Segment on Thursdays. This week, Sojourner Truth host Margaret Prescod interviews Dogwood Alliance’s Scot Quaranda about the recent decision of the EPA not to regulate emissions from the burning of wood to make electricity.
Listen to the segment by clicking here and going to minute 21:10.
Comments Off on KPFK Radio Earth Segment This Week on the EPA’s Ruling on Biomass Burning
Filed under Bioenergy / Agrofuels, Climate Change, Energy, False Solutions to Climate Change, Greenwashing
July Photo of the Month: Cree Women, Whapmagoostui Quebec 1993
First Nations Gathering, Whapmagoostui, Quebec, Canada 1993
Photo: Langelle
Eighteen years ago, in July of 1993, Anne Petermann and Orin Langelle were invited by Cree Chief Mathew Mukash to visit Cree territory to document the effects of, and resistance to, Hydro-Quebec’s damming of rivers on their traditional lands to provide electricity to Canada and the US.
In the above photograph, Cree elder women listen intently during the First Annual Whapmagoostui (Great Whale) Gathering on the banks of Hudson Bay near James Bay. At this gathering, Cree and Inuit peoples came together to discuss their resistance to Hydro-Quebec’s plans to expand their hydro-electric projects by building a new dam on the Great Whale river.
Many stories were told during this gathering about how First Nation Peoples are enduring the plundering of their land and about their struggle to protect it.
One testimony described how the Cree who lived on their ancestral island of Fort George were relocated to flimsy houses in the prefabricated town of Chisasibi on the mainland, when Hydro-Quebec built a massive dam on the La Grande river, threatening their Fort George island home. Since the relocation, the Cree in Chisasibi have been plagued by a high rate of alcoholism, drug abuse and suicide. Some people in the community developed symptoms of mercury poisoning from eating fish from their traditional fishing areas, due to mercury leaching out of the flooded soil and into the new reservoirs.
“Cree culture has a lot to offer in the area of nature, which is something very much needed in the world. In western society, everything is segregated. That is what is ruining the world. People have to think more holistically about their actions. Everything comes down to ‘how much money can I make from this.’ Until this changes, all this talk of environmental protection is bullshit.” — Cree Helen Atkinson
———————————————————————————–
Orin Langelle, GJEP’s Co-director/Strategist, is currently working on a book of four decades of his concerned photography. From mid-June to mid-July Langelle worked on his book as an artist in residence at the Blue Mountain Center in New York’s Adirondack Mountains.
Also check out the GJEP Photo Gallery, past Photos of the Month posted on GJEP’s website, or Langelle’s photo essays posted on GJEP’s Climate Connections blog.
Comments Off on July Photo of the Month: Cree Women, Whapmagoostui Quebec 1993
Filed under Climate Change, Energy, False Solutions to Climate Change, Indigenous Peoples, Land Grabs, Photo Essays by Orin Langelle
KPFK-GJEP Earth Minute Radio Segment: France Outlaws Fracking
http://archive.kpfk.org/parchive/mp3/kpfk_110719_070010sojourner.MP3
and forward to Minute 35:13
Earlier this month, France made the historic decision to outlaw hydraulic fracturing, also called fracking. In doing so, France became the first country to pass a law banning the dangerous industrial practice.
Fracking is a technique used to extract natural gas and oil by using intense pressure to inject water, sand and chemicals into dense rock to release the trapped oil and gas.
Under France’s law, energy companies use fracking in France will have their permits revoked.
In the US, fracking has led to the contamination of ground water, with some residents near fracking sites reporting that they can actually light their tap water on fire.
Anti-fracking campaigns have risen up across the US, and cities including Buffalo, NY and Pittsburgh, PA have also banned the practice.
As with off-shore drilling, stripmining the tarsands, and arctic oil exploration, fracking is moving in the wrong direction. With the spectre of climate chaos looming, we need to be creating strategies to live without fossil fuels, not creating additional pollution through more extreme fossil fuel extraction techniques.
For the earth minute and the SoJourner Truth show, this is Anne Petermann, from Global Justice Ecology Project.
Comments Off on KPFK-GJEP Earth Minute Radio Segment: France Outlaws Fracking
Filed under Climate Change, Earth Minute, Energy, False Solutions to Climate Change, Hydrofracking, Pollution, Posts from Anne Petermann
Brazil Tree Biotechnology Conference Post #1
by Anne Petermann, Executive Director, Global Justice Ecology Project
After seemingly endless hours in airports and on airplanes, I finally arrived at the Porto Seguro airport in Bahia Brazil, and from there, ferried across to Arraial D’ Ajuda in the state of Bahia, Brazil, where the International Union of Forest Research Organizations (IUFRO—pronounced Yew-Fro) is hosting a conference called “Tree Biotechnology 2011” along with co-hosts Embrapa and Veracel. Veracel is one of the largest timber companies in Brazil—created from a merger of StoraEnso, a very controversial Swedish-Finnish timber company and Fibria, a Brazilian timber firm.
Last night (Sunday) was the official opening of the conference and the keynote speech by Ron Sederoff, a veteran forest geneticist from North Carolina State University. But before Ron’s speech, the CEO of Veracel presented some background for why the conference was being held in Brazil—the first time the conference had been held in South America.
He started off by impressing the audience with the economic importance of the timber industry in Brazil. He explained it generates US$7.5 billion in exports while still being a “low-carbon activity that generates green jobs.”
Brazil is currently the fourth largest producer of pulp in the world, producing 8% of the global total. China is second at 12% and Canada third at 10%. But the global runaway leader is the United States, at 27% of the global total.
This notorious accomplishment has come at a high price in the US. One in five acres of the forests of the Southeast have been converted to pine plantations—over 40 million acres. Nearly 6 million acres in the region are clearcut every year just for paper. New demands for wood-based bioenergy are expected to result in another 40 million acres of biodiverse forest lost to plantations. Timber plantations also mean toxic chemicals. Between 1990 and 2000, more chemicals were used on the plantations of the US South than the rest of the world combined, contaminating water and causing illness.
Not to be outdone by the U.S., the Veracel executive explained that he expects production of pulp in Brazil to triple in the next 10 years.
In 2000, he explained, Brazil’s output was 7,200,000 tons, and by 2010 it was almost 9,800,000 tons. Bahia, the state where Veracel is based and where this conference is being held, produces 2,247,000 of those tons.
Our conference agenda includes a day long field trip to see the wonders of Veracel’s glowingly “green” operations on Wednesday. That should be interesting indeed. Their pulp mill is located, according to the CEO “in the middle of the forest,” which, he said, was exactly the idea—to be near the resource base, a “mosaic” of “planted” and “natural” forests. Of their over 200,000 hectares of forest holdings, he said, 100,000 is “preserved” forest. I am a bit unclear on how one “preserves” forests in the midst of plantations. Perhaps in mason jars…
However it is done, Veracel will undoubtedly apply for REDD credits for it (that is credits [i.e. money] for storing carbon under the auspices of the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation scheme of the World Bank and UN). A win-win! Money for cutting down forests and money for not cutting down forests. In the words of Tina Vahanen, of the UN REDD Secretariat “REDD will be extremely beneficial for forestry.”
But back to the topic at hand. What all of these dizzying statistics ultimately mean, is that the area of land covered by tree plantations in Brazil is rapidly expanding. Where will this expansion take place? That is a good question. It will require vast acreages of land. Land will need to be converted from its current form (as forests, agricultural lands, ranch lands) into industrial-scale timber plantations. In the cases where land that is not forested is used, it will likely result in what is called “indirect land use change,” where the former uses of the land move into and hence destroy biodiverse forests.
But let me make one thing crystal clear. There is no such thing as a “planted” forest. There are forests, and there are timber plantations and one bears no resemblance to the other; not ecologically; not in terms of carbon storage capacity (forests are rich in carbon, plantations are not), not for biodiversity, and not for the ability to provide for the needs of forest dependent communities. Saying a plantation is a forest is like saying a corn field is a prairie.
This intentional confusion causes many problems. It allows expansion of industrial timber plantations to be called “reforestation” “afforestation” or even “sustainable forest management,” and clouds the ability to determine exactly how much forest is being lost every year. With the global focus on reducing deforestation as a means to curb climate change, one would think that accurate calculations of forest loss would be important. Maybe so, but not to the UN or the World Bank—the biggest promoters of REDD. To add insult to injury, there have even been proposals to “reforest” the Amazon with non-native eucalyptus plantations.
And looming on the horizon, somewhere off in the distance, is the spectre of plantations of genetically engineered trees; trees genetically transformed to make them more easily (and cheaply) manufactured into the product of choice: paper, electricity, liquid fuel, chemicals, plastics, textiles, lumber. You name it, they’ve got somebody working on GE trees for that exact purpose.
And all of this is sold as “green.” After all, trees are a “renewable” alternative to fossil fuels! In fact, in his presentation on what’s coming up in the next few years, our Veracel Executive listed “climate change, the Green Economy” and Rio+20” in the same bullet point.
This is what many environmental, human rights and climate justice organizations have been warning about—that the upcoming conference in Rio de Janiero (in June 2012)—the 20 year follow up to the original “Rio Earth Summit”—will use the ever-worsening climate crisis as the excuse through which to push the so-called “green economy.” The green economy is merely the same old failed economic system in a pretty new green wrapping and essentially means the commodification of all life on earth in the service of maintaining business as usual for as long as possible beyond all natural limits.
And it was on this note that the conference “Tree Biotechnology 2011” kicked off, here in the state of Bahia, Brazil.
Stay tuned tomorrow for more fun and games.
Comments Off on Brazil Tree Biotechnology Conference Post #1
Filed under Climate Change, Energy, GE Trees, Greenwashing, Latin America-Caribbean, Posts from Anne Petermann
This Week’s Earth Minute: Indigenous Resistance in Guatemala
To listen to this week’s Earth Minute, written and recorded by Global Justice Ecology Project and aired on the Sojourner Truth show on KPFK Los Angeles, go to minute 40:24 at:
http://archive.kpfk.org/parchive/mp3/kpfk_110621_070010sojourner.MP3
This week’s Earth Minute talks about the resistance of Indigenous Q’eqchi People in Guatemala against plans to take their lands to grow feedstocks for agrofuels (industrial-scale biofuels).
Comments Off on This Week’s Earth Minute: Indigenous Resistance in Guatemala
Filed under Bioenergy / Agrofuels, Earth Minute, Energy, False Solutions to Climate Change, Indigenous Peoples, Land Grabs
Listen to GJEP’s Earth Segment from 17 June–Nukes and Bonn Climate Talks
Listen Global Justice Ecology Project’s weekly Earth Segment from last Thursday on The Sojourner Truth show on Los Angeles’ KPFK Pacifica radio station.
On this week: Independent journalist Tina Gerhardt discusses the backlash against nuclear power and the outcomes of the UN climate talks in Bonn, Germany.
To listen, go to the following link. The interview starts at minute 26:55.
http://archive.kpfk.org/parchive/mp3/kpfk_110616_070010sojourner.MP3
Comments Off on Listen to GJEP’s Earth Segment from 17 June–Nukes and Bonn Climate Talks
Filed under Climate Change, Energy, UNFCCC